“Pooh! I shall not give
it up so!” exclaimed Fanny, when it was certain
that Tom Magner did not intend to join the party.
“What will you do?” asked Kate.
“Go to Pennville, of course.”
“How will you get there?”
“In the boat; we will take the Greyhound.”
“You know we can’t do anything of the
kind, Fanny Grant.”
“I know we can,” replied the resolute
girl.
“But who will manage her?”
“I will manage her myself.”
“You?”
“Yes; I know how to manage a
boat as well as any of them. I have sailed enough
to understand the whole thing,” added Fanny,
as she led the way to the pier, off which the sail-boat
was moored.
“Do you think I will risk my
life in a boat with no one but you to manage it?”
“But I know how to handle the
boat as well as any one,” persisted Fanny.
“There isn’t much wind, and I’m sure
there is no danger.”
Kate Magner had a great many doubts,
but the vision of cakes and candy, lemonade and ice-cream,
which her companion’s money would purchase,
tempted her to yield. The breeze was apparently
very light, and it seemed hardly possible that the
boat could be upset. She wavered, and Fanny saw
the advantage she had gained.
“If we don’t get along
very well, we can hire some boy or man to manage the
boat for us,” continued the resolute girl, pressing
the point upon her yielding companion. “There
are some men and boys fishing over there, and they
will be very glad to make some money.”
“That will be the best way.
If you will get one of those men to manage the boat,
I will go with you; for there isn’t any fun in
being drowned, or in being run over by a steamboat.”
“Very well, I will do that,”
replied Fanny, her black eyes snapping with renewed
vigor.
Ben, the boatman, who usually haunted
the pier and the boat-house like a familiar spirit,
had added many infirmities to his burden of cares
during the eight years which have intervened since
we first knew him, and he was now confined to his
house by an attack of rheumatism. There was no
one near, therefore, to interfere with the execution
of Fanny’s plan. The Greyhound was moored
a short distance from the pier, at which the small
skiff, which served as her tender, was fastened.
The two girls were about to embark in the little boat,
when footsteps were heard at the upper end of the
pier.
Fanny started, released her hold of
the painter of the skiff, and at once realized that
her brilliant project was in imminent danger of being
defeated. She turned to observe who the intruder
was, and to her horror and consternation, discovered
that it was Mr. Long, the constable, the greatest
bugbear in the world to her on ordinary occasions,
and especially so in the present instance, when her
conscience accused her of a very wicked deed.
There was no opportunity to retreat,
for the enemy was between her and the main land.
She had been so intent upon the argument with her more
cautious companion, that she had not noticed the approach
of the constable until his feet struck upon the planking
of the pier. The money she had stolen was in
her pocket, and it felt just like a coal of fire,
which was soon to create a conflagration that might
burn her up. She very much desired, just then,
to get rid of this evidence of her crime, and she
would have dropped the roll of bills into the water
if it would have sunk to the bottom, and disappeared
from the sight of the terrible man who was approaching.
Fanny did not doubt that the loss
of the money had been discovered by Mrs. Green, and
that she had sent for the constable to arrest her and
put her in prison-a threat which the housekeeper
had injudiciously made on a former occasion, when
the naughty girl had been guilty of a similar fault,
but a threat which Mr. Grant would not have permitted
to be carried out. This terrible punishment appalled
Fanny, but she did not entirely lose her self-possession.
She had done a very great wrong; she had staked everything
upon the success of the present venture. She
was entirely satisfied that Mr. Grant, on his return,
would send her to her uncle in Minnesota, and she
had prepared herself for the worst. Her object,
therefore, was to escape present defeat, and she hoped,
cornered as she was by the constable, that some means
of getting out of the dilemma might be presented to
her.
“We are caught,” said
Kate, as Mr. Long moved down the pier.
“Not yet,” replied Fanny,
with more confidence than she actually felt.
The consciousness of being the leader
in the enterprise led her to put on a bold face in
order to inspire her friend with confidence, if for
no other purpose.
“What shall we do?” demanded Kate, nervously.
“Keep still; don’t you say a word.”
“What are you doing here, Fanny,
at this time of day?” asked Mr. Long, as he
approached the girls.
“I’m not doing anything,” replied
Fanny, boldly.
“Why are you not at school?”
“The teacher sent us down to
get some green branches to put over the clock.
We are going to have some visitors in school this afternoon,”
replied Fanny, promptly.
“Did she send the other girl, too?”
“Yes; she sent both of us.”
“I want to see you, Fanny; come
with me,” continued the terrible constable,
beckoning her to follow him up the pier.
“What do you want of me?”
“I wish to speak with you a moment.”
“I can’t stop long, for
we must hurry back with the boughs,” added Fanny,
who had no relish for a confidential conversation with
such a man, for she at once surmised its topic.
“Are you looking for green boughs
out on the end of that pier?” said he.
“We only went out there for
a moment,” pleaded Fanny, as she followed Mr.
Long, but it was with the intention of darting away
from him at a favorable moment.
But the constable stopped before he
reached the head of the pier, which effectually prevented
her retreat unless she jumped into the water.
“What do you want of me, Mr.
Long?” she asked, with increasing boldness.
“Fanny, you have been very bad
again,” began the tormentor.
“No, I haven’t.”
“Yes, you have; and you needn’t attempt
to deny it.”
“What have I done?”
“You know what you have done.”
“I haven’t done anything,”
protested she, speaking for the sake of speaking,
rather than because she had any confidence in the impression
her words would produce upon the mind of her tormentor,
and all the while thinking how she could break away
from the constable.
“‘Thou shalt not steal,’”
said Mr. Long, impressively.
“What do you mean by that?”
demanded Fanny. “Do you mean to say that
I steal? If you do, you are very much mistaken.”
“Fanny, if you didn’t
steal anything, it was only because you did not find
anything to steal.”
What could he mean by that? She
was perplexed, but she began to hope that he did not
know what she had done.
“I do not want to steal,”
said she; and now she spoke for the purpose of drawing
out her accuser, to ascertain how much he did know.
“You have been guilty of stealing
several times,” continued the constable, assuming
a very stern and virtuous aspect.
“I never meant to steal anything.”
“But you meant to steal this time: the
cat is out of the bag.”
The constable’s stern features
relaxed a little, and there was something like a smile
playing upon his face, as if in faint appreciation
of a joke.
“The cat is out of the drawer,
if that is what you mean,” said Fanny, laughing,
and now greatly encouraged by the new aspect of the
case.
“That is what I mean.”
“But I didn’t let the cat out,”
protested Fanny.
“Who did?”
“Mrs. Green.”
“Fanny, you are lying to me,
and you know you are,” added Mr. Long, sternly.
“I hope to die if it isn’t
just as I say!” persisted the wicked girl, earnestly.
“Mrs. Green let the cat out of the drawer, and
I had a good laugh over it.”
Fanny began to laugh very heartily.
The constable was staggered, and it was evident that
he was not smart enough to deal with one so shrewd
and clever as the wayward girl.
“What are you laughing at?” asked Mr.
Long.
“I was laughing to think of
the poor cat as she jumped out of the drawer and ran
away. What did you put her in there for?
Were you afraid she would steal the meat or the milk?
Could that cat read, Mr. Long? Were you trying
to teach her one of the ten commandments?”
“Do you mean to tell me, Fanny,
that Mrs. Green let the cat out of the drawer?”
“Yes, she did. Poor pussy
mewed awfully in the drawer, where you put her.
Perhaps she was saying over the commandment you gave
her to learn; but Mrs. Green didn’t understand
her lingo, and let her out.”
“Fanny, I am going up to see
Mrs. Green, and if you have told me a lie, it will
be all the worse for you,” said Mr. Long.
“You can ask Mrs. Green herself.”
“I will ask her. You meant
to steal: you were seen watching Mr. Grant when
he had the key of the drawer.”
“And you set a trap to catch
me; but you caught Mrs. Green!” laughed Fanny.
“I don’t believe a word
of your story; but I am willing to be sure before
I do anything.”
“What are you going to do?”
“I shall take care of you; you
will know what I mean when I have proved the case.”
“You ought to have told Mrs.
Green where you put the cat, for the poor creature
would have starved to death before I let her out.”
“We shall see. Mr. Grant
told me to take care of you if you did not behave
yourself while the family were away. I will go
up and ask Mrs. Green about this matter, and if I
find you have not told me the truth,-and
I don’t believe you have,-I shall
take care of you.”
“When shall I see you again?”
asked Fanny, with the most brazen impudence.
“You will see me sooner than
you will want to see me, if you have been doing wrong.”
“But I shall not be here when
you come back. We are going right up to school
now.”
“I can find you, wherever you
are,” replied the constable, confidently, as
he walked away towards the mansion.
Fanny was entirely relieved of all
her fears; she was even jubilant over her success
in cheating her persecutor. Her conscience did
not trouble her now. She readily comprehended
the details of the plan by which she was to be detected,
if she attempted to steal from the library. Of
course, the constable would soon find out that she
had not told the truth, and that Mrs. Green knew nothing
about the cat in the drawer.
After the announcement that the family
were to be absent a week, had been made, it was observed
that Fanny was in unusually good spirits. Miss
Fanny had detected her in the act of looking through
one of the library windows, while her father was paying
a bill in the room. Mr. Grant, wealthy as he
was, had always been very methodical in his business
affairs. He kept a sum of money in a drawer for
household expenses, to which Mrs. Green and his daughters
had access. When anything was paid out by any
member of the family, the amount was put down on a
paper in the drawer. After the advent of Fanny
Jane, and after she had been detected in some small
pilfering, the key of this drawer was concealed as
we have described.
Miss Fanny at once suspected the motive
of her wayward charge, and told her father of the
fact, on the day before the departure of the family
for Hudson. Mr. Grant, more desirous of reforming
the wicked girl than of anything else, consulted Mr.
Long. Mrs. Green was told where she might find
money for the payment of the household bills, and admonished
to be very careful in concealing the keys; but nothing
was said to her about the cat and the commandment.
If Fanny did attempt to steal, the case was to be
managed by the constable, who had been instructed to
take her to his own house, and keep her in close subjection
until the return of the family.
The cat belonged to Mr. Long, who
was confident that the animal, when released by the
act of the thief, would run home, when her presence
would inform him of the culprit’s deed.
The cat-true to her domestic instinct-had
run home; but the constable had not immediately seen
her. As soon as he discovered the tell-tale pussy,
he hastened over to Woodville, expecting to find Fanny
penitently studying the commandment, which was the
moral of Mr. Grant’s stratagem; but before he
reached the house he saw two girls on the pier, and
recognized Fanny as one of them.
Willing to be entirely fair, and deeming
it possible that Mr. Grant’s plan had failed,
he went up to the house to consult Mrs. Green, while
Fanny rushed down the pier to join her companion in
mischief.